Nevada Air National Guardsmen overlaid a bird tracking system onto computerized maps, bringing two systems together to help pilots avoid avian-infested airspace and potential bird strikes. Computer wizards at the 152nd Airlift Wing safety office took dysfunctional U.S. Avian Hazard Advisory System software and successfully meshed it with Google Earth, according to a Jan. 30 release. “Before this innovation, all you had to look at was tabular data …to figure out where the bird strike hazards were,” said Lt. Col. Anthony Machabee, 152nd AW safety chief. “Now we have an easy-to-use visual aid to help our airmen” across the Air Force plan low-level flight routes and avoid accidents, he added. The software fix visually integrates bird avoidance and soaring computer models with radar and map data, according to the release.
Key Air Force, Space Force Leaders Set to Retire
May 23, 2022
The Department of the Air Force announced the retirements of several key leaders within the Air Force and Space Force on May 23, while also unveiling more than a dozen new assignments for current or future one-star generals.